
Tighter Fed curbs risk appetite
The Federal Reserve has maintained a markedly tight monetary policy stance throughout 2026, with interest rate settings that market participants say are beginning to have real consequences for the broader economy. A new report from Yahoo Finance analyzes what a potential regime shift in the central bank's approach could mean for financial markets.
Bitcoin is trading at around $62,452 as of July 9, 2026, while the Fear & Greed Index sits at 22 out of 100 — a level that signals pronounced fear among investors.

Weak jobs data changes the equation
A weak U.S. employment report earlier in July prompted analysts to revise their expectations. Stephen Coltman, head of macro at 21Shares, commented on July 4, 2026, that the market had priced in further tightening from the Fed, but that the data suggests this is unwarranted. He noted that inflation expectations have fallen sharply and that current monetary policy is in practice becoming increasingly restrictive — which in his view sets the stage for a dovish shift from the Fed later this year, with a potentially positive effect on "debasement" trades in precious metals and cryptocurrency.
It is important to emphasize that these are analysts' assessments, not confirmed Fed policy. The central bank has not publicly signaled any change of course.

History is clear: Liquidity drives crypto
The relationship between Fed monetary policy and crypto valuations is well documented. During the Covid-era quantitative easing between 2020 and 2021, Bitcoin rose from around $3,800 to nearly $69,000. When the Fed reversed course and implemented aggressive rate hikes combined with quantitative tightening in 2022, Bitcoin fell from $47,000 in March to $16,000 by year-end.
The Fed's balance sheet, which peaked at $8.9 trillion following the pandemic's QE program, was reduced by $2.2 trillion through quantitative tightening over approximately three years, concluding in December 2025.
Analysts see upside in a dovish pivot
Alvin Kan, Chief Operating Officer at Bitget Wallet, argues that if the Fed does change course — whether through rate cuts, balance sheet expansion, or other measures — cryptocurrency has historically entered medium- to long-term uptrends as risk appetite returns and capital rotates into high-beta assets.
Simon-Peter Massabni, Head of Business Development at XS.com, underscores that Bitcoin is today more sensitive to U.S. macro data than ever before — particularly employment figures, inflation reports, and signals from the Fed.
There is nonetheless reason to nuance the picture: cryptocurrency has at times fallen even during rate-cutting cycles, because markets had already priced in the expected changes. Other factors such as regulatory news and geopolitical uncertainty also play an independent role.
What does this mean for Norwegian investors?
For Norwegian investors with exposure to international equity or crypto markets, developments in U.S. monetary policy are a key parameter. The oil price, which is critical for the Oslo Stock Exchange, is also affected by the dollar strength that typically accompanies tight Fed policy. Norges Bank operates independently, but indirectly imports tighter financial conditions when global liquidity contracts.
In a risk-off environment like the current one — with Fear & Greed at 22 and Bitcoin down from its peak levels — there is broad consensus among sources that the market is waiting for a clear signal from the Federal Reserve before risk appetite can recover.
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